Buena Vista Lake | |
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Location | San Joaquin Valley Kern County, California |
Coordinates | 35°11′31″N 119°17′40″W / 35.19191°N 119.294557°W |
Type | dry lake |
Primary inflows | Kern River Connecting Slough |
Basin countries | United States |
Surface area | 60 to 150 square miles (160 to 390 km2) |
Average depth | 3.3 m (11 ft) |
Surface elevation | 88 m (289 ft) |
References | [1] |
Buena Vista Lake was a fresh-water lake in Kern County, California, in the Tulare Lake Basin in the southern San Joaquin Valley, California.
Buena Vista Lake was the second largest of several similar lakes in the Tulare Lake basin, and was fed by the waters of the Kern River. The Kern River's flow went into Buena Vista Lake southwest through the site of Bakersfield via its main distributary channels or south through the Kern River Slough distributary into Kern Lake and then into Buena Vista Lake via Connecting Slough.
In times when Buena Vista Lake overflowed it first backed up into Kern Lake making one large lake. When this larger lake overflowed it flowed out through the Buena Vista Slough and Kern River channel northwest of Buena Vista Lake through tule marshland and Goose Lake, into Tulare Lake.
Today Lake Webb and Lake Evans occupy the lakebed on the northern shore of the former Buena Vista Lake.[2]
In June 2023, with 300% snow pack in the Southern Sierra Mountains, the Kern river started to fill the top section of Lake Buena Vista to a depth of only a few feet.
Tulamniu Indian Site | |
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Location | Marker is at Block House #BV4 North of Buena Vista Pumping Station |
Official name | Tulamniu Indian Site |
Designated | September 6, 1941 |
Reference no. | 374 |
On Buena Vista Lake south shores was the site of the Tulamniu Indians, who spoke Buena Vista Yokuts. The site is a California Historical Landmark number 374.
California Historical Landmark reads: